Cypress

Botanical and Common Names

Cautions

Do not take the essential oil internally without professional supervision.

Description

Indigenous to Turkey and cultivated throughout the Mediterranean
region, the cypress is an evergreen tree, growing to 100 feet, having
tiny dark green, feathery leaves and male and female cones. The herb is
gathered in the spring. Native to Mexico, the Montezuma Cypress looks a
little like the giant cypress trees, with a brown bark, brilliant
blue-green foliage, and conical fruit.

History

Ancient Greeks took the cones, mashed and steeped them in wine, for dysentery, the coughing up of blood, asthma, and coughs.

The Spanish name comes from the Aztec words for "old one of the water" because they live for hundreds of years.

It is said that Cortés knelt and wept
under such a tree outside Tenochtitlán during his temporary defeat on
June 30, 1520, at the hands of the Aztec forces.

The ancient tree of Tule, near Oaxaca,
is a tourist attraction, and stands more than 144 feet high and 160
feet in circumference.

The Aztecs used a tea made from the
leaves and bark to bathe wounds. They also placed a piece of burned bark
directly on sores, burns, and ulcerations of the skin.

Packets of twigs and needles are
commonly found in botánicas and markets in Mexican markets and in
Mexican-American neighbourhoods.

Key Actions

astringent

antispasmodic

mild antiseptic

tonic

vasoconstrictor

Key Components

volatile oil (pinene, camphene, cedrol)

tannins

Medicinal Parts

Cones, branches, essential oil

Traditional Uses

Used internally, is an expectorant for head colds, coughs, bronchitis, and for whooping cough.

Externally, it is used in ointment or lotion forms and applied to varicose veins and hemorrhoids.

A footbath of the cones is prepared as a foot cleanser and to counter excessive sweating.

Such conditions as colds, flu, sore throats, rheumatic aches, and pains also benefit from cypress.

In Latin America, all parts of the tree are used to heal hemorrhoids, varicose veins, chest congestion, scabies, and wounds.